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OAKLAND, California (Ticker) -- The schedule dictated that the Toronto Raptors should have been tired. Someone forgot to tell that to the Golden State Warriors. Antonio Davis scored 28 points as the Raptors built a huge early lead and completed a successful road trip with a 106-88 pounding of the hapless Warriors. Playing for the fourth time in five nights proved to be no trouble for the Raptors, who built an 18-point lead after one quarter and a 65-35 advantage at halftime. Toronto led by 34 points in the first half. Davis scored 18 points in the opening half and finished two points shy of his career high, established January 14, 1997 at Sacramento while he was a member of the Indiana Pacers. He was acquired by Toronto from Indiana during the offseason. "I think we did pretty well under the circumstances. It's tough to come out and play as many games as we had in those days," Davis said. "It's all a learning experience. When the playoffs hit you play every other day. I think this was a good test to see where we are." Vince Carter, the reigning Rookie of the Year, added 22 points for Toronto, which completed a 3-2 road trip and beat Golden State for the third straight time. "It's definitely given us confidence. Now we know we're capable of playing some of the best teams in the west," Carter said. "Now it's time to go home and see how we do there. We have a lot of home games and we have to take care of it." Antawn Jamison scored 25 points to lead the Warriors, who have dropped five straight games to put coach P.J. Carlesimo's job in jeopardy. Golden State was without two regular starters in John Starks and Donyell Marshall. Starting center Erick Dampier has yet to play this season due to a knee injury. But Jamison was not making excuses for the club's recent performance. "It's a lot of things. Teams come in and beat us by 20 and 30 points," he said. "We just can't accept that. We have to be mad at the world. I don't want this get to the point where we lose by 15 or 20 and guys think this is another game. We have to be mad at you know what and say, we can't allow this to happen. "We have to have some kind of pride. A lot of guys on this team want this team to be successful and they want to win basketball games and have their pride. But we have to establish that quickly because we're getting to the point where guys are accepting losing." Toronto left little doubt about the result in the first quarter. Leading 11-6, the Raptors went on an 18-2 run to take control. Dee Brown and Davis highlighted the spurt with six points each. Things just became worse for the Warriors in the second quarter and they trailed by as many as 34 points at 57-23 with 4:59 to play before halftime after Tracy McGrady sank a short jumper. The Raptors shot 56 percent (24-of-43) in the opening half and finished at 46 percent (40-of-87). Tony Farmer contributed 16 points and 11 rebound and Adonal Foyle had 11 and 15 for the Warriors, who shot just 40 percent (36-of-89) and held a 54-43 rebounding edge. Warriors veteran reserve Terry Cummings, who scored 11 points, was critical of the performance from the starters. "I just think when we come out guys are not prepared to play or the unit we put on the court is too soft because the only thing happening in the first part of the game, is the first unit comes out and starts shooting jump shots. They don't go inside," he said. "On the defensive end, they don't put bodies on people to stop them from running their offense. We let people do what they want to. They run around the paint, set pick and rolls, throw crazy passes and still get layups. We're not doing the little things that make us a really good team. The thing I miss most is that we don't play hard for 48 minutes."
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